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Grandson charged with murder in death of Hall County man

Firefighters discovered the body of 68-year-old Andrew Donaldson inside the burned out remains of his home on Meadow Drive in Oakwood on Feb. 14, 2022. (photo by Hall County Fire Services)

Hall County sheriff’s investigators say a man found dead in an Oakwood house fire on Valentine’s Day had been shot. They’ve charged his grandson with murder.

Firefighters discovered the body of 68-year-old Andrew Donaldson in his burning home on Meadow Drive Monday. An autopsy revealed he had been shot.

During their investigation, HCSO investigators determined Donaldson’s 29-year-old grandson, Lorenzo Moss, of Wisconsin, was allegedly involved in the death. U.S. Marshals arrested Moss at a location in Brown Deer, Wisconsin, on Wednesday.

MORE: Investigators release name of man found dead in Hall County house fire

“Investigators believe Moss traveled from Wisconsin to Georgia, but the reason for his trip is unclear at this time,” says Hall County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer BJ Williams.

While investigators believe the fire was set to destroy evidence of the shooting, it remains unclear whether Donaldson died as a result of the shooting or fire. The investigation is ongoing and officials are withholding further information at this time.

Hall County investigators charged Moss with malice murder. Other charges are pending.

Suspect shot by Stephens County deputy identified, charged with assaulting an officer

File photo (NowHabersham.com)

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation has charged a Toccoa man with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer after he allegedly tried to steal a gun away from a Stephens County deputy. 36-year-old Joel Eugene Keller was shot while struggling with the deputy over the gun, the GBI says. The deputy was not hurt.

According to the initial investigation, the deputy attempted to stop a pickup truck on Yearwood Road in Toccoa around 1:17 p.m. Tuesday, February 15. The driver, who the GBI later identified as Keller, reportedly refused to stop and the deputy pursued him.

The pursuit ended on Broad River Road when the pickup truck wrecked. Keller then allegedly got out of the vehicle and approached the deputy.

“There was a struggle between the driver and deputy and during this struggle, the deputy’s gun was unholstered,” GBI spokesperson Nelly Miles says. “The deputy and the driver fought over the gun during which the deputy fired one shot, striking the driver.”

Paramedics airlifted Keller to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville. The GBI says he’s in stable condition.

The Stephens County Sheriff’s Office asked the GBI to conduct an independent investigation into the shooting, which is standard protocol when officers are involved. Miles says the GBI investigation is active and ongoing. More charges are expected to be filed.

Once the investigation is complete, the GBI will turn the case file over to the Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office for review.

This is the 14th officer-involved shooting the GBI has been asked to investigate in 2022.

FBI witness: Defendants in Arbery killing used racial slurs

Defendant Gregory McMichael looks on during his trial and of William "Roddie" Bryan and Travis McMichael, charged with the February 2020 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga., Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021. (Octavio Jones/Pool Photo via AP)

Two of the three white men convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery repeatedly used racial slurs in text messages and social media posts, an FBI witness testified Wednesday in their federal hate crimes trial.

FBI intelligence analyst Amy Vaughan led the jury through dozens of conversations that Travis McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan had with others, identified only by their initials, in the months and years before the 25-year-old Black man’s killing. The FBI wasn’t able to access Greg McMichael’s phone because it was encrypted, Vaughan said.

In text and Facebook conversations with friends, Travis McMichael frequently used the N-word to describe Black people. In a Facebook conversation with a friend, he also shared a video of a young Black boy dancing on a TV show with a racist song that included the N-word playing over it. He also said that Black people “ruin everything” and repeatedly said he was glad he wasn’t a Black person, using a racial slur.

In other social media posts, Travis McMichael advocated violence against Black people. In December 2018, he commented on a Facebook video of a Black man playing a prank on a white person: “I’d kill that f—-ing n—-r.”

And in June 2017, he shared a TV news story about a violent confrontation between two white women and two angry Black customers at a Georgia restaurant, using a racial slur to comment that he would beat the Black people “to death if they did that to (name redacted by the FBI) or my mother and sister.” He added that he would have no more remorse than putting down a rabid animal.

Bryan also used the N-word, but his preferred slur was one that refers to a derogatory characterization of a Black person’s lips, Vaughan said. Over a number of years, Bryan exchanged racist messages on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. In messages sent in the days surrounding Arbery’s killing, Bryan was clearly upset that his daughter was dating a Black man.

Greg McMichael posted a meme on Facebook in 2016 saying white Irish slaves were treated worse than any race in the U.S. but that the Irish aren’t asking for handouts.

“I ain’t really shocked,” Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery, told reporters outside the courthouse. Still, he said he didn’t realize “all that hate was in those three men.”

Defense attorneys had few questions for the FBI analysis and didn’t dispute the racist posts. They said in their opening statements to the jury Monday that racist comments by their clients were offensive and indefensible but don’t prove that they committed hate crimes.

Travis McMichael’s attorney, Amy Lee Copeland, said some of his texts and posts lacked context, and “you can’t hear that inflection of voice and see what’s going on.”

The McMichaels armed themselves and used a pickup truck to chase Arbery as he ran through their coastal Georgia neighborhood on Feb. 23, 2020. A neighbor, Bryan, joined the pursuit in his own truck and recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael blasting Arbery with a shotgun.

No arrests were made until the video leaked online two months later.

Defense attorneys have insisted the deadly pursuit of Arbery was motivated by an earnest, though erroneous, suspicion that Arbery had committed crimes.

Both McMichaels and Bryan were convicted of murder last fall in a Georgia state court and sentenced to life in prison. Racist comments by the men weren’t presented as evidence in the murder trial, in which prosecutors downplayed issues of race and focused on proving the three had no justification for pursuing and killing Arbery.

All three pleaded not guilty to federal hate crime charges accusing them of violating Arbery’s civil rights and targeting him because he was Black. A jury of eight white members, three Black people and one Hispanic person was sworn in Monday.

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

GSP releases name of man killed in White County crash

fatal accident

A single-vehicle crash in White County Tuesday afternoon claimed the life of a Rockmart man. The Georgia State Patrol has identified him as 22-year-old Harvey Mason Lawrence Leahey.

Troopers say Leahey was driving a Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck south on GA 384/Duncan Bridge Road when he ran off the road and struck a guardrail. After impact, the driver lost control of the vehicle, crossed over the northbound lanes, and struck the guardrail on the east shoulder of the road.

“After the secondary impact, the driver was ejected from the vehicle where he came to a final rest on the northbound lane of State Route 384,” says Corporal Joseph Tucker of Georgia State Patrol Post 6 in Gainesville.

After Leahey was thrown from the truck, the vehicle kept traveling. It crossed the south and northbound lanes again, striking the guardrail on both sides of the road. The truck came to a final rest on the east shoulder of the roadway.

This is the second fatal wreck in White County in two weeks. Diane Roach, of Alto, died on February 3 in a single-vehicle crash on Webster Lake Road.

USFS credits interagency ‘cooperation’ for successful Unicoi Wildfire response

Crews from the US Forest Service and Georgia Forestry Commission clear containment lines to keep the fire from spreading on Feb. 13, 2022. (photo by Red Bird Media)

Wildfire fighting operations are winding down in northern White County where a fire, burning since February 12, consumed 184 acres near Helen. The U.S. Forest Service and Georgia Forestry Commission have 17 wildland firefighters still on the scene, down from 50 during the first part of this week.

The Unicoi Wildfire remains 100% contained and with rain moving into the region, U.S. Forest Service officials are preparing to close out their operations.

Crews spent the day Tuesday mopping up and patrolling the area northeast of Unicoi State Park to find any remaining heat sources that could threaten fire containment lines. They also installed water bars and seeded fire lines to reduce potential erosion.

“Today crews will complete fire line repair and continue patrolling,” says USFS spokesperson James Wettstaed. “The fire will continue to have light staffing levels until secure.”

The Unicoi Wildfire was sparked by someone burning leaves at a residence off Highway 356. They did not comply with burn rules and regulations, according to the White County Public Safety Department. Illegal burning can lead to civil and criminal penalties in Georgia. Now Habersham has reached out to authorities to determine what, if any, penalties the person who started the fire might face but has not received a response.

The wildfire, which started with someone burning leaves, consumed 184 acres northeast of Unicoi State Park. (photo by Red Bird Media)

The fire began near Mountain Madness Drive and spread west to Unicoi Campground Road near Unicoi Lake. Despite its proximity to some of the most heavily trafficked tourist destinations in Northeast Georgia, firefighters were able to contain the blaze and only had to shut down one hiking trail. Smith Creek Trail will remain closed until it’s safe for hikers, Wettstaed says.

He credits the successful fire emergency response to coordination among federal, state, and local agencies.

“The coordination between the Forest Service, Georgia Forestry Commission, and White County worked great and made it so much easier to deal with the fire.”

White County Public Safety Director David Murphy echoes those sentiments.

“We are proud of the cooperation of local, state, and federal partners providing for the safety of our community and preserving our natural resources,” Murphy says. “The result is the product of countless hours of building relationships and planning. Thanks to our community for all their support and prayer during this event.”

Johnny Lee Higginbotham

Johnny Lee Higginbotham, age 53 of Demorest, Georgia passed away on Friday, January 21, 2022.

Born in Atlanta, Georgia on May 04, 1968, he was a son of the late William Higginbotham Sr. & Roxanne Knight Gravitt. Johnny will be missed deeply by his family and friends.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sons, Stephen Higginbotham & Donald Higginbotham; brother, Preston Higginbotham, & sister, Katherine Higginbotham Jackson.

Survivors include his son, Jonathan Higginbotham of Oklahoma; brothers, William Higginbotham, Jr. of Alto, GA; & Danny Higginbotham of Demorest, GA; 5 grandchildren, numerous nieces, nephews, other relatives, & friends.

Johnny’s wishes were to be cremated and a private family celebration of life will be held later.

An online guest registry is available for the Higginbotham family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Warren Lawrence Adams, Sr.

Warren Lawrence Adams, Sr. age 77 of the Hollywood Community, Clarkesville, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Monday, February 14, 2022.

Born in Great Falls, Montana on January 20, 1945, he was a son of the late Henry Lawrence & Floy Hawn Adams. Warren was a veteran, having served his country proudly for 4 years in the United States Air Force. He was a graduate of The University of Florida where he received an Associate degree in Criminal Justice. Warren was a hardworking man, holding many different jobs over his working career. He was a past Wildlife Officer, served as an Investigator for the Florida State Agriculture, and was the owner of Warren Adams Sales for many years where he specialized in Western distribution. Warren surrendered his call to the ministry of the Lord and spent years pastoring churches including Oakey Mountain Baptist Church in Clarkesville for over 9 years. In his spare time, Warren was a very giving person who was passionate about helping others in need, especially Disabled Veterans. He spent the last several years helping his late friend, Alex Harris work with Healing Waters Disabled Veteran’s Group assisting them with trout fishing at River’s Edge on The Soque. Warren was a member of the Level Grove Baptist Church in Cornelia. He was affectionately known as “Poppy”.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by infant children, Frances Ann Ellison, James Frederick Ellison, & Elizabeth Gale Ellison; brother, Buddy Deweese & sister, Peggy Cavel.

Survivors include his loving wife of 55 years, Gale Adams of the Hollywood Community, Clarkesville, GA; son & daughter-in-law, Warren Lawrence “Beau” Adams, Jr. & Elizabeth Adams; grandchildren, Taylor Woodham, Bryce Dakota Adams, William Riley Townsend, Grace Ann Townsend, Abby Faith Adams, & Adam Edward Townsend all of Clermont, GA; sister-in-law, Ruby Medlin of Deland, FL; niece, Debra Medlin, nephews, Douglas Medlin & Paul Medlin all of Deland, FL; as well as many other special friends.

Warren’s wishes were to be cremated and a memorial service honoring his life will be held at a later date.

An online guest registry is available at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia.

(706) 754-6256

Habersham ESPLOST to be on the ballot in May

Habersham County voters will decide the fate of the county’s education special local option sales tax this spring. The board of education on Monday approved a resolution to put the ESPLOST 6 referendum on the primary ballot in May. The proposed tax is estimated to raise $59 million for Habersham’s public schools over 5 years.

Georgia enacted ESPLOST in 1996, giving school districts in the state the opportunity, with voter approval, to adopt a 1% sales tax with revenue earmarked for capital outlay. ESPLOST 5, which was to raise $35 million for Habersham’s schools, expires at the end of this year.

While the school board presents ESPLOST 6 as a renewal, every ESPLOST is a separate tax measure that can last up to five years. If approved by voters, Habersham County’s current 7% sales tax rate would remain the same: If voted down, the county’s sales tax rate would drop to 6%.

According to the proposed referendum, money from ESPLOST 6 would go to pay up to $26 million in debt service on existing bonds, including those used to build Fairview Elementary and Habersham Central High School. The rest would be used for a wide range of capital expenditures including, but not limited to, facility, transportation, technology, and security updates, purchasing instructional materials, and possible land acquisitions.

One of the likely big expenditures would be school buses. Habersham County School Superintendent Matthew Cooper says the county’s current fleet is aging and needs to be replaced. The state provides funding for two and a half buses each year, but Cooper said the county needs more than that. If ESPLOST 6 passes “we want to buy about 40 more new buses,” he said.

While the Habersham County Board of Education has not released a specific list of projects, Cooper stressed during Monday’s meeting that ESPLOST is vital to ongoing operations. Without it, he said, “our general budget could not meet all the needs of our schools and our school system.”

Using the broad base of people who pay sales tax as a selling point, the superintendent stressed that county residents are not the only ones who pay it – so do visitors.

“People are coming to Habersham from all over, spending their money,” Cooper said. “And guess what they’re doing? They’re paying off the debt on the schools, and our property owners should be smiling about that. They’re not only paying off the debt, all that other stuff [school expenditures] . . . they’re paying for that, too.”

If voters fail to pass ESPLOST 6, it will fall to the county’s property owners to make up the shortfall, Cooper said.

Habersham County Schools Superintendent Matthew Cooper presented his argument for voting in favor of the E-SPLOST to the BOE and community. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“That debt shouldn’t be placed on property owners, but without ESPLOST, that’s the only option we have. There are no other options, that’s it. Without ESPLOST, that debt has to be paid by the property owners and only the property owners,” Cooper said.

If voters approve ESPLOST 6 Cooper made a commitment to make the school system debt-free.

“We would be among the very few [schools] in this state that would be debt-free,” he said. “We can do it and we will do it, I’m going to commit to it. We will be debt-free if we get the ESPLOST.”

The BOE plans to unveil its list of proposed ESPLOST 6 projects in March ahead of the May 24 primary.

Click here to read ESPLOST 6 referendum

This article has been updated for clarity

House panel endorses more transparency in health plans’ data

A House committee Tuesday approved a bill that would require more public disclosure about Georgia health plans serving Medicaid patients and state employees and teachers.

House Bill 1276, if it becomes law, would require the main state health agency to post reports showing how many primary care providers these insurance plans offer in a county, along with data on the insurers’ hospital costs and prescription drug spending.

Hawkins

Members of the House Health and Human Services Committee did not voice any objections to the measure, which now goes to the Rules Committee in that chamber.

The legislation was sponsored by Rep. Lee Hawkins, a Gainesville Republican and a dentist. He said that as lawmakers, “we’ve always wanted to see’’ the insurance information required in the bill.

“We’ve got to know where the problems are,’’ Hawkins told the committee. “We’ve had a hard time understanding exactly what’s wrong.’’

The information would be collected by health insurers and then transmitted to the state Department of Community Health (DCH), which oversees Medicaid and the State Health Benefit Plan. The latter benefits plan covers more than 600,000 state employees, teachers, other school personnel, retirees and dependents.

Jesse Weathington, CEO of the Georgia Association of Health Plans, an industry group, sat next to Hawkins during his presentation to the committee. Hawkins said Weathington agreed to the bill’s provisions.

The proposed legislation, though, comes amid calls for greater financial and performance transparency about how the state Medicaid insurers provide care.

Under a separate bill, the managed care plans serving much of the Medicaid population are facing potential requirements to refund payments to the state if they don’t spend enough on medical care and quality improvements for patients.

That proposal is contained in the bipartisan mental health bill introduced by Georgia House Speaker David Ralston.

Ralston (left), with Kevin Tanner, chairman of a mental health commission, and Insurance Commissioner John King, speaking about his bill.

Georgia Health News and Kaiser Health News reported in September that Georgia is one of only a few states that doesn’t mandate a minimum level of medical spending for its Medicaid insurers.

The House health panel is expected to take up the Ralston legislation, House Bill 1013, on Wednesday.

Last September, a report from the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families found that Georgia failed to post important information about Medicaid management and performance on the DCH website. For example, the state did not post quality metrics or enrollment data that are delineated by race and ethnicity, which the Georgetown report said is “vital to ensuring that Medicaid equitably delivers care.”

DCH’s performance dashboard shows how each Medicaid insurer performs on national quality metrics through using a star-rating system. The latest data come from measurement year 2019.  The dashboard does not break up the data by race or ethnicity.

Prior to the new dashboard, some key data were difficult to find on the DCH website, Georgia Health News reported.

The new bill would require DCH to post “demographic and population-based reporting on common disease states.”

Hawkins’ legislation would also require the state to post the per-member, per-month “cost figures” for the Medicaid, PeachCare and fee-for-service plans that provide health insurance to hundreds of thousands of Georgians, most of them children.

Virginia Mae Nelms Loudermilk

Virginia “Jean” Mae Nelms Loudermilk, age 83, of Mt. Airy, passed away on Tuesday, February 15, 2022.

Born on June 7, 1938, in Cleveland, she was the daughter of the late Frank and Lessie Ferguson Nelms. Virginia worked most of her life in the sewing industry, she was an at home seamstress and did work for many people in Habersham County. She loved baking and cooking for her family and others. She loved spending time with her family, especially her grandchildren. Virginia was loved by many.

In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her brothers, Otis Nelms, Curtis Nelms, Jr. Nelms and Mack Nelms.

She is survived by her husband of 64 years James Charles Loudermilk of Mt. Airy; daughters and sons-in-law, Donna Loudermilk Patrum (Joel) of Mt. Airy, Pamela Sue Loudermilk Davis (Calvin) of Mt. Airy; sisters, Dorothy Nelms of Cleveland, Ruth McAllister of Cleveland; grandchildren, Scotty (Jen) Sanders of Mt. Airy, Brandon (Ansley) Patrum of Clermont, Kyle (Whitnie) Patrum of Mt. Ariy; great-grandchildren, Vayda Sanders, Ava Sanders, Anistyn Patrum, Anderson Patrum, Kenslie Hill, Aubrie Patrum; many nieces and nephews.

No formal services are planned at this time.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Critics fume as Sonny Perdue closes in on Georgia’s university chancellor job

Former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue spoke to Republican state lawmakers at the Capitol Nov. 9 2020 during the party’s caucus elections. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue, who also served as United States secretary of agriculture, has been named sole finalist to lead the state’s public college and university system despite worries over his lack of educational experience and fears that his conservative political past may be seen as divisive to some students.

The Georgia Board of Regents voted unanimously to approve Perdue as finalist for chancellor of the University System of Georgia at a special called meeting Tuesday afternoon. By state law, the regents must wait at least 14 days between naming a finalist and voting to approve them. If, as expected, Perdue passes the full vote, he will take the reins from interim Chancellor Teresa MacCartney, who has been leading the system’s 26 public colleges and universities since former Chancellor Steve Wrigley retired in July.

Sonny Perdue is flanked by former President Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence at a 2018 event. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images 

“I consider being named the finalist as the Chancellor of the University System of Georgia to be a wonderful capstone to a career of public service,” Perdue said in a statement. “Education is the most important issue at the federal, state and local level and it’s why, as a legislator, I sought to be chair of the Senate Higher Education committee to work on important initiatives with Gov. Zell Miller and former USG Chancellor Steve Portch.”

Perdue rose through the state Senate as a Democrat before switching parties in 1998 and becoming Georgia’s first Republican governor since Reconstruction in 2002. He handily won re-election in 2006.

In 2017, he was tapped by then-President Donald Trump to serve as agriculture secretary, and he served until the end of Trump’s term.

Board Chair Harold Reynolds said Perdue’s impressive resume makes him an ideal candidate.

“He has extensive background in public service, including government management experience and leadership at the highest levels. He was twice elected by the people of this state to serve as our governor, and he has served our nation as the United States Secretary of Agriculture. He was also the chair of the Senate Higher Education Committee, during his time in the Georgia General Assembly. He holds a doctorate of veterinary medicine degree from his beloved alma mater, the University of Georgia, and has a passion for higher education, and specifically for this state’s public colleges and universities. I’m excited about the future of the university system with him at the helm.”

But critics point out that his resume does not include academic leadership.

“He is completely inexperienced in education, and this appointment — though it shouldn’t be — is blatantly political,” reads a Change.org petition with 1,529 signatures created by a group called Stop Sonny. Gov. Brian Kemp sought to fend off those charges in a statement congratulating Perdue released shortly after the hearing.

“As a cabinet level official who was confirmed with overwhelming, bipartisan support, he managed a budget roughly 15 times that of USG and navigated challenging times of disruption that required innovative thinking,” Kemp said. “Georgians will benefit from his decisive and creative leadership over a system which now serves more than 340,000 students. I look forward to working with future Chancellor Perdue to ensure the quality of our higher education continues to be worthy of the best place to live, work, learn, and raise a family.”

Perdue was long reported to be Kemp’s top choice, despite the fact that Perdue’s first cousin, former U.S. Sen. David Perdue is challenging Kemp for the governor’s job. Sonny Perdue helped accelerate Kemp’s political rise by naming him secretary of state in 2010. Although Kemp is now on the outs with Trump for failing to overturn the 2020 election, the former governor reportedly convinced the president to offer Kemp his endorsement in 2018, helping him defeat then-Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle in the GOP primary.

The search has been clouded by charges of political paybacks. The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges sent a letter to the Board of Regents warning about undue political interference, and an executive search firm hired to help find the replacement for the retired former Chancellor Steve Wrigley quit last year amid questions of whether Perdue was a done deal.

“The search for a chancellor must be conducted in the open and must include meaningful faculty participation,” the American Association of University Professors wrote in an open letter to the regents Monday. “The USG system deserves and demands a chancellor who understands higher education, who has the confidence of the faculty who work in the system, and who will work to enhance the entire Georgia system to ensure Georgia students have the best educational experience.”

Some of his past political stances may also put Perdue at odds with some in Georgia’s campus communities. His first election as governor was fueled by debate over the 1956 state flag, which his predecessor Democratic Gov. Roy Barnes changed to remove the Confederate cross. Perdue supported a statewide referendum that would have included the old flag with its Confederate symbolism. He later declared April 2006 Confederate History Month in Georgia. Just over a quarter of Georgia’s 340,638 public college students are Black, and for many Georgians, the Confederate flag is an enduring symbol of racist hatred.

Perdue’s full-throated support of Trump also causes heartburn for some young people in a state that narrowly rejected the former president in 2020. Georgians between 18 and 29 supported President Joe Biden over Trump by 56% to 43%, a wider margin than any other age group in the state, according to Washington Post exit polling.

But Perdue’s reputation as a staunch conservative may endear him to other members of the state government, which is still dominated in all three branches by the GOP. Republican lawmakers have filed multiple bills this session seeking to push back against what they see as an increasing cultural shift in Georgia universities, including bills to ban the promotion of “divisive concepts,” in classrooms, and expand campus free speech zones after receiving complaints of censorship from right-wing speakers.

If Perdue wants to weigh in on those hot button issues, he did not signal that Tuesday, instead vowing to support students in learning and employees in teaching.

“I want to make a difference by providing leadership and resources so that faculty can thrive in their teaching, research and service and students are inspired and supported so they graduate, find rewarding careers and become productive citizens,” he said. “I am honored to be considered for such an important role.”

Lady Indians claim first-ever region tournament championship!

The TFS Lady Indians celebrate their first-ever region tournament championship on Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022. (photo by TFS Athletics)

For one of Tallulah Falls’ most successful programs over the past 4 years, the only thing missing was a region tournament championship. The Lady Indians can now check that box after a 47-38 win over Prince Avenue Christian at George Walton in the title game on Tuesday night.

In a tight, low-scoring night, the Lady Indians never wavered on the way to the win. The girls grabbed a 12-7 lead following the first quarter of play. Prince Avenue battled back to within a single point at 16-15, but TFS used a 5-0 run to close out the half. Molly Mitchell hit a 3-pointer with a second left on the clock, and the Lady Indians were up 21-15.

TFS outpaced Prince Ave 8-4 in the low-scoring third, giving the Lady Indians a comfortable 29-19 cushion going into the final stanza. Prince Avenue stormed back with an immediate 3-pointer. It appeared as though TFS was set to put the game away when driving up the lead to 33-22, but Prince Avenue scored 8 unanswered, which included back-to-back 3-pointers to make it a 3-point game with under 5 minutes to play.

Denika Lightbourne retaliated with her own triple, pushing it to 36-30 with 3 minutes to go. Lightbourne then converted a 3-point play to make it 39-32 with 1:54 on the clock. From there, the Lady Indians locked it down for the historic win, closing out the game with an 8-6 run.

The Lady Indians are now on a 3-game win streak and are 13-4 overall. The girls had claimed the regular season region title for a second straight season, but this marks the first-ever straight-up region championship for girls basketball.

Lightbourne paced the offense with a game-high 14 points, while Macy Murdock added 11 for TFS. Veronaye Charlton had 7, Kailyn Neal 6, Mitchell 5, and Tanisha Seymour 4.

The journey continues next week when TFS will host the first round of the state playoffs on either February 22 or 23, with the opponent to be determined.